Early life De Meester was born in
Roeselare, Belgium. As a teenager, she studied to become a teacher and proved to be a competent and kind teacher who was admired and respected by her students. She then decided to leave the school where she taught to be able to serve the poor. On May 4, 1881, she joined the
Canonesses Regular of
Ypres, Belgium, at the medieval Abbey of Notre Dame de la Nouvelle Plante, to fulfill her calling.
Missionary In the 1880s the abbey received an appeal from a
Catholic priest in the city of
Mulagumudu, then in the
British Raj, for help in administering an orphanage. De Meester felt that this was an opportunity to serve for which she had longed. With the permission of her superiors she left Belgium, accompanied only by an enthusiastic volunteer
novice of the community, and set sail for India. The pair arrived there, only to find that the priest had died during their journey. Though she lacked the understanding and support of the local
bishop, Mother Louise and her companion took charge of the orphanage and began to care for the children it housed. To find support in their work, new members of the community were recruited, including local women. To allow for the formation of a sustainable community, De Meester saw that separation from Belgium was needed, otherwise candidates would have to travel to Europe for their religious formation as members of the Order. As a result, in 1897 she established a new
religious institute called the
Missionary Canonesses of St. Augustine. De Meester shared the chores of the small community, teaching the children and caring for the house, as well as carrying out her responsibility for the young
Congregation. After the Philippines, foundations were established in China, the United States, the
Belgian Congo. De Meester returned to Belgium in 1923 and in 1928 died in
Heverlee (now part of the city of
Leuven) at the age of 71. ==Legacy==